Events

KAZAKHSTAN: NEW THREAT TO DE-REGISTER PARTIALLY DEMOLISHED HARE KRISHNA  COMMUNITY
 
 By Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>, and
  John Kinahan, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>
 Friday 8 December 2006


As well as physically demolishing Hare Krishna-owned homes at their  commune near the country's largest city Almaty, the authorities also  appear to be trying to legally de-register the religious community based  at the site, Forum 18 News Service has learnt. On 1 December, four
 officials from the Religious Affairs Section of the Justice Department of  Almaty Region visited the farm in what they described as an "unofficial"  capacity. They stated that they were following orders from the capital  Astana to the regional Justice Department, Maxim Varfolomeyev of the Hare  Krishna community told Forum 18 on 7 December.
 
 The officials were led by Serik Niyazbekov, a senior religious affairs  official of the regional Justice Department. They claimed that the name of  the community's chairman, Viktor Golous, is "not in our database" and  therefore the community must apply to be re-registered by the state. Under  Kazakh law, the only legal reasons for such a demand are changes in either  a religious community's legal address or statutes.
 
 A list of 23 questions was then produced by the officials, who demanded
 answers to questions such as:  - How many members does the community have and is this number increasing  or decreasing?  - What is their approximate age?   - What nationalities are they?  - What social class do they belong to?   - Are there any foreign missionaries in the community?   - Where does the community acquire literature?   - Does the community own printing facilities in Kazakhstan and in Karasai  region?   - How is the community financed?
  - Do any funds come from abroad and if so from where?
 
  The Hare Krishna community answered the officials' questions during the 1  December visit, and the officials then arranged an appointment to meet  Golous, the community's chairman, in an Almaty restaurant on 3 December.  The Almaty region officials did not keep the appointment, although Golous  did.
 
 Niyazbekov of the regional Justice Department confirmed to Forum 18 that  he was among the officials who visited the Hare Krishna commune on 1  December, adding that this was the first time he had visited the site.  Despite Forum 18's repeated attempts to find out why officials had asked  more than twenty questions apparently irrelevant to the legal situation of  the community's legal registration, Niyazbekov was unable to explain the  reasons for the questions.
 
 "We asked about the full name of the leader, the legal address of the  organisation, things like that," he told Forum 18 from Taldy-Kurgan on 8  December. He would not tell Forum 18 who had organised the visit and for  what purpose. Asked repeatedly whether the Justice Department had any  complaints about the way the Hare Krishna religious community had  functioned, he eventually responded: "They've been registered since 2002  and so have functioned legally since then. Any problems they have are not  connected with the Justice Department." Asked whether his department was  preparing to strip the community of its legal status Niyazbekov responded:
 "I can't answer such questions."
 
 Also on 1 December, Almaty city Justice Department rang the community to  arrange to "just meet you and get to know you better".
 
 On 5 December, Golous was telephoned by an Almaty regional official - who  refused to give his name - who then started asking the same 23 questions  and also when he would come in person to re-register the community's  charter. Golous replied that there is no need to re-register the charter,  as there is no legal basis for the request. "The official became very  angry and repeated that we should come and reregister our charter," Hare  Krishna sources told Forum 18. Golous responded that the visit of the  officials was, according to them, "unofficial", as was the telephone  conversation. He informed them that he was not obliged to respond, but,  would properly respond to any request if they came through the proper  channels.
 
 "The Society for Krishna Consciousness has been registered in Almaty  region since 2002 and we have never had enquiries regarding our  registration until the demolition," Govinda Swami told Forum 18 on 7  December. "Now the Justice Department has begun approaching us with
 unofficial enquiries in their attempts to liquidate our Society. There is  no article in the Kazakh Constitution obliging religious organisations to  answer these questions."
 
 On 21 November, Kazakhstan authorities began bulldozing Hare Krishna-owned  homes at the Sri Vrindavan Dham commune (named after the "beautiful forest  of Vrindavan" in India where Krishna spent his youth) in Karasai District,  the only Hare Krishna commune in the region. Thirteen homes out of 66 have  been bulldozed so far, with five more threatened with demolition. However,  the authorities seem determined to complete the demolition and confiscation  despite an international outcry (see F18News 24 November 2006
 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=876>).
 
 Judge Turdakyn Tutkushbayev of Karasai District Court - who is handling  the latest five cases against Hare Krishna devotees - vigorously rejects  any suggestion that the legal moves against devotees have any religious  background. "We have no cases against Krishnaites," he told Forum 18 from  Keskelen, the administrative centre of Karasai District, on 7 December.  "We only have cases against citizen Golous." Galina Golous, a Hare Krishna  devotee, is one of the five whose homes are threatened with legal  confiscation (see F18News 1 December 2006
 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=881>).
 
 Repeatedly asked why, if the religious affiliation of the devotees is not  relevant to the cases, only Hare Krishna-owned homes have been targeted  for destruction and confiscation, Judge Tutkushbayev refused to answer and  kept repeating: "No cases are dealt with on the basis of faith. We have not  considered any Hare Krishna cases and are not now considering any Hare
 Krishna cases." He then declined to answer any more questions and put the  phone down.
 
 Kazakh officials in and outside the country routinely and unconvincingly  deny that attacks on the commune have anything to do with religious  freedom. In another example of these denials, a religious affairs  official, Ryskul Zhunisbayeva, screamed at one of the devotees Galina
 Golous "this has nothing to do with religion," when Golous asked why a  religious affairs official was involved in the case. This Kazakh claim has  been contradicted by, among others, the Organisation for Security and  Co-operation in Europe's (OSCE) Advisory Panel on religious freedom. Only  Hare Krishna properties and devotees in the area have been targeted, and  the OSCE Advisory Panel is "deeply concerned" by Kazakhstan's actions (see  F18News 1 December 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=881>).
 
 Zhunisbayeva, who supervises religious affairs in the Karasai district  Internal Affairs Department, refused to discuss why only Hare Krishna  homes in the village are being seized. "They are not Krishnaites but  citizens of Kazakhstan," she insisted to Forum 18 from Keskelen on 8  December. "They violated the land code and illegally seized the land." She  then put the phone down.
 
 Rati Manjari of the Hare Krishna community met Erlan Abdakasov of the  national state Religious Affairs Committee, which is part of the Justice  Ministry, on 4 December, she told Forum 18 that day. When she asked why  Zhunisbayeva, a religious affairs official, was representing Karasai  District in the five court cases, Abdakasov claimed not to know about the
 cases and promised he would "investigate" them. He also claimed - without  offering any explanation - that he did not know about the partial  demolition of the commune.
 
 Rati Manjari then asked what measures would be taken to restore the  demolished properties for the homeless people, to which Abdakasov claimed,  despite allegedly not knowing about the demolitions, that the demolition  took place in line with court orders. Abdakasov also stated that the  General Prosecutor's Office had told him that the court decisions against  the Hare Krishna community and devotees were fair.
 
  Abdakasov was unable to explain why - if the court decisions are fair -   only Hare Krishna devotees and property have been targeted. When Rati      Manjari pointed out that this is a clearly observable evidence of      "religious discrimination," Abdakasov "exploded". He repeated that this  was simply the execution of court decisions.
 
 In a further worrying development, lawyers who have been defending the  Hare Krishna community for the past two years were last month intimidated  into stopping work for the community (see F18News 1 December 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=881>).
 
 Despite their eagerness to gain the chairmanship of the Organisation for  Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), the Kazakh authorities have not  responded to the 27 November offer by the OSCE Advisory Council on Freedom  of Religion or Belief "to meet with the Kazakh authorities in order to  discuss the situation and to extend its good offices to assist in the
 resolution of that dispute" (see F18News 1 December 2006
 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=881>).
 
 Niyazbekov of the regional Justice Department, who visited the commune on  instructions from the capital Astana on 1 December, told Forum 18 on 8  December that he "honestly" knew nothing about the OSCE Advisory Council's  offer of help in resolving the dispute.
 
 Gauhar Halil of the Cultural and Humanitarian Cooperation Department of  the Foreign Ministry admitted that her ministry has not yet responded to  the OSCE Advisory Council offer. "We have sent on the offer to the Justice  Ministry and we're still waiting for a response from them," she told Forum  18 from Astana on 8 December. "This issue is within their competence not  ours, so we pass on all such communications to them." She said in the past  half year she has passed on about twenty or thirty communications about the  fate of the commune to the Justice Ministry from organisations and  institutions around the world. "All such signals are taken seriously."
 
 However, Halil insisted that the authorities are strictly abiding by the  law. "Maybe you have a distorted picture," she told Forum 18. "We don't  look at the Krishnaites as Krishnaites but as lawbreakers. We are  indifferent to what religion people follow - we just follow the law."
 Asked whether - given the store set by the Kazakh government on its  contacts with the OSCE - the government will invite members of the  Advisory Council to help resolve the conflict she said she would ask the  Justice Ministry again.
 
 The OSCE has confirmed to Forum 18 that the Kazakh authorities have not  replied to the OSCE. "The Advisory Council's offer was communicated  through the 27 November press release. However, the Kazakh authorities  have not yet responded to the OSCE, so we will be following this up with  them," Urdur Gunnarsdottir, spokesperson for the OSCE's Office for
 Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, told Forum 18 from Warsaw on 8  December. "The OSCE has been discussing the case of the Hare Krishna  commune with the Kazakh authorities bilaterally since October. They are  fully aware of our position."
 
 Govinda Swami told Forum 18 that so far no other registered groups of  Krishna devotees elsewhere in Kazakhstan have experienced problems. He  believes this is because there are so few members where the groups are  registered and, primarily, because they do not own property. "But due to  the ongoing harassment in Karasai District culminating in the destruction  of our community, Krishna devotees in other regions are feeling insecure  as to what the government may do with them," he told Forum 18.
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